Android-x86

A 5-post collection

Having problem with the Android AVD manager complaining about the memory limit of your AVD when trying to boot an hardware accelerated android emulator? Starting emulator for AVD 'android-avd-name' emulator: The memory needed by this VM exceeds the driver limit. HAX is not working and emulator runs in emulation mode The problem is that the memory allocated by the device preconfigurations has been set higher than the memory limit you allocated to Intel HAXM when you installed it. Change the

If you are trying to run your Android apps in a harware accelerated android emulator on Mac OS X, you may experience a crash, or your whole mac will freeze up, ending in a reboot. The default installation of intel HAXM that comes with the Android SDK manager is version 1.0.6. Intel has released a Hotfix, revision 03 of the HAXM software, available here. Download and install the “haxm-macosxr03hotfix.zip”, Which has a version number of 1.0.

If you are developing apps for Android and Windows Phone, and have both emulators installed, you may have noticed that the Windows Phone emulator runs smootly, while the Android emulator is a bit slow. If you had set up Intel HAXM for hardware acceleration of the Android emulator (see how in this post), this may have been disabled when you installed the SDK for Windows Phone, which is virtualized with Hyper-V instead of HAXM, which seems to take over for

This post will show you how to enable hardware acceleration for your Android emulator. It will supercharge developing and testing apps and make it a much better experience. You need: Android SDK An x86 image of the Android emulator you wish to run (not the regular ARM version) Install via the Android SDK. Intel HAXM (Hardware Accelerated Execution Manager) Intel cpu with support for VT-x, EM64T, and Execute Disable Bit (can be enabled in the bios if supported) Eclipse (Optionally,

I have earlier made a post on how to try out Android 4.0 through the AVD manager, it works, but its rather slow. So I figured I would test the Android-x86 project now that they a couple of hours ago released an Android 4.0 image. This article will guide you through the setup of Android 4.0 in virtualbox. It will work a lot smoother than through the AVD. There are a couple of steps in this guide,